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Royals Mondesi to undergo surgery on injured left shoulder

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — Royals shortstop Adalberto Mondesi will have surgery to repair the left shoulder he injured over the weekend, though the club hopes its budding star will be ready by opening day next season.

Mondesi hit .263 with nine homers and 62 RBIs to go with 20 doubles, 10 triples and 43 stolen bases. But he was limited to just 102 games after sustaining a subluxation to his shoulder in July, then hurting it again in Sunday’s loss to the Minnesota Twins.

Royals trainer Nick Kenney said Wednesday that the recovery time is usually about six months.

The 24-year-old Mondesi, who is not eligible for arbitration until 2021, is considered one of the cornerstones of the Royals’ youth movement. He’s just the seventh player in club history with at least 40 steals and 10 triples, and the first since Carlos Beltran during the 2003 season.

K-State releases times for non-conference basketball home games

MANHATTAN, Kan. – Kansas State Athletics released the times for its men’s basketball non-conference home games today (September 25), including its marquee contest with Marquette on Saturday, December 7 at Bramlage Coliseum and the Wildcat Classic against Saint Louis on Saturday, December 21 at the Sprint Center in Kansas City.

 

The return of a home-and-home series that started last season, the Marquette game will tipoff at 8 p.m., CT before a nationally televised audience on ESPN2. It will be the Golden Eagles’ first meeting in Manhattan since 1986.

 

The 10th Wildcat Classic at Sprint Center will start at 6 p.m., CT and will air on Big 12 Now on ESPN+. Single-game tickets for the game will go on sale in early October.

 

The home schedule begins with a pair of exhibition games, beginning with Emporia State at 8 p.m., CT on Friday, October 25 and concluding with Washburn at 7 p.m., CT on Wednesday, October 30. The opener with North Dakota State on Tuesday, November 5 will tip at 7 p.m., CT, as well as home games with Monmouth (Wednesday, November 14), Arkansas-Pine Bluff (Tuesday, November 19), Florida A&M (Monday, December 2) and Alabama State (Wednesday, December 11). The last non-conference home game against Tulsa on Sunday, December 29 will start at 5 p.m. CT. All these non-conference home games will air on the new Big 12 Now on ESPN+

 

K-State fans can find all games on Big 12 Now via the ESPN App, ESPN.com or espnplus.com for $4.99 a month or $49.99 a year and can be canceled at any time. The App is available on most major mobile and connected-TV platforms, including iPhone, iPad, AppleTV, Android devices, Roku, Chromecast, FireTV, XBOX One, Playstation 4, Oculus Go and Samsung connected TVs. It is also available via ESPN.com on the web.

 

For more information on Big 12 Now on ESPN+, including how to sign up, click here.

 

Ben Boyle (play-by-play) and Stan Weber (analyst) will call all non-conference men’s basketball games on Big 12 Now on ESPN+.

 

Aside from these home games, other non-conference contests include a game at UNLV at 3 p.m., CT on Saturday, November 9 on ESPN+, the Rocket Mortgage by Quicken Loans Fort Myers Tipoff on Monday and Wednesday, November 25 and 27, the Never Forget Tribute Classic against Mississippi State at 10:30 a.m., CT on Saturday, December 14 on ESPNU at the Prudential Center in Newark, N.J., and the Big 12/SEC Challenge at Alabama at 5 p.m., CT on Saturday, January 25, 2020 on ESPN2.

 

The first game against Pittsburgh in the Fort Myers Tipoff will tip at 5 p.m., CT on FS1, while the second game against either Bradley or Northwestern on November 27 will start at either 5 or 7:30 p.m., CT, also on FS1.

 

In addition, the Big 12 recently announced times for several conference games. The Big 12 opener at Oklahoma on Saturday, January 4 will now tip at noon on Big 12 Now on ESPN+, while the game at Iowa State on Saturday, February 8 has been moved to 7 p.m., CT on ESPN2. The lone game time yet to be determined is the contest at Texas on Saturday, January 11.

 

Season tickets for the 2019-20 season are currently on sale with a variety of pricing options available, including the new Flex Season Ticket and the popular Wildcat 4-Pack and Young Alumni packages. Fans can purchase tickets in a variety of ways, including toll free at (800) 221.CATS (2287), online at www.kstatesports.com/tickets and in-person at the Athletics Ticket Office located in Bramlage Coliseum.

 

– www.k-statesports.com –

 

 

————
TOM GILBERT
Director for Men’s Basketball Communications | K-State Athletics

 

K-State’s Holtorf named semifinalist for Campbell Trophy

MANHATTAN, Kan. – Kansas State senior center Adam Holtorf is one of 71 FBS players and 185 from all NCAA divisions and the NAIA to be named a semifinalist for the 2019 William V. Campbell Trophy, the National Football Foundation & College Football Hall of Fame (NFF) announced Wednesday. The award recognizes an individual as the absolute best football scholar-athlete in the nation.

 

A native of Seward, Nebraska, Holtorf is the sixth Wildcat semifinalist for the award in as many years, joining Tyler Lockett (2014), Stanton Weber (2015), Will Davis (2016), Trent Tanking (2017) and Dalton Risner (2018). Lockett, Risner and Tysyn Hartman (2011) were all named finalists for the award.

 

“These 185 impressive candidates truly represent the scholar-athlete ideal,” said NFF Chairman Archie Manning, whose sons Peyton (Campbell Trophy winner) and Eli were named NFF National Scholar-Athletes in 1997 and 2003, respectively. “For more than 60 years, the NFF National Scholar-Athlete program has showcased more than 800 college football players who have been successful on the football field, in the classroom and in the community. And we are excited to celebrate the 30th year of the William V. Campbell Trophy, which honors the best of the best. This year’s semifinalists further illustrate the power of our great sport in developing the next generation of influential leaders.”

 

The William V. Campbell Trophy criteria states a player must be a senior or graduate student in their final year of playing eligibility, have a GPA of at least 3.2, have outstanding football ability and have demonstrated strong leadership and citizenship.

 

A career 28-game starter, Holtorf earned 2018 First Team Academic All-America honors in addition to First Team Academic All-Big 12 accolades for a second-straight season. Holtorf, who earned his bachelor’s degree in agribusiness in December 2018, completed his undergraduate work with a 3.916 GPA. He was one of four Wildcats that were nominated for Academic All-Big 12 honors last year with a perfect 4.0 GPA, while he also earned Second Team Academic All-America honors as a sophomore in 2017.

 

On the field, Holtorf has helped the 22nd-ranked Wildcat start the 2019 season with a 3-0 record as they rank seventh nationally in rushing (280.0 yards per game), 13th in scoring (44.0 points per game) and fourth in third-down offense (57.9%). Off the field, Holtorf has participated in Cats in the Classroom, Senior Cats and Special Olympics among other community-service initiatives.

 

No. 22 Kansas State travels to Oklahoma State on Saturday for a 6 p.m., game that will be shown on Big 12 Now on ESPN+. The Wildcats return home for a three-game homestand that begins on October 5 against Baylor. That game kicks at 2:30 p.m., and will be shown on either ABC, ESPN or ESPN2.

 

– k-statesports.com –

 

 

————
RYAN LACKEY
Director of Football Communications | K-State Athletics

 

 

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High School football classifications and enrollments for 2020 & 2021

Junction City and Manhattan remain in Class 6A in the Kansas State High School Activities Association football classifications and enrollments for 2020 and 2021.

Enrollment numbers are based on ninth, tenth and eleventh graders only.

The range for the 32 schools in Class 6A is 1,854 down to 1,092. Junction City has the 28th highest enrollment at 1,136 students in the three grades combined.  Manhattan has the 13th highest enrollment at 1,402 students. Wichita East the highest overall at 1,854 students.

Hutchinson will move from 5A into 6A and Olathe West will go from 6A to 5A.

Royals top the Braves 9-6

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — The Royals hope to send off manager Ned Yost with a winning final week.

In Kansas City’s first game after Yost announced he will retire after the season, the lowly Royals burst to a six-run lead in the first three innings and beat the NL East champion Atlanta Braves 9-6 Tuesday night behind three hits and two RBIs from Nicky Lopez.

Yost, who turned 65 last month, was hired by the Royals in May 2010 and led Kansas City to consecutive AL pennants and the 2015 World Series title, the second in team history and first since 1985. The Royals are 58-100 in their third straight losing season.

“We want to send him out on as high a note as possible,” winning pitcher Danny Duffy said. “The season hasn’t gone the way we wanted and he deserves to go out on a better note.”

Atlanta, assured it will start the NL Division Series at home on Oct. 3, is 96-62. The Braves need to win all four of their remaining games to reach 100 victories for first time since 2003.

“I was telling the boys, my fastball command all day was yard sale. It wasn’t there. It was all over the map,” Duffy said.

Julio Teheran (10-11) gave up six runs and six hits in 2 1/3 innings. Yost credited Whit Merrifield’s 13-pitch at-bat in the first inning as a key.

Lady Jay tennis competes in Manhattan quadrangular

The Junction City Lady Jay tennis team competed in a quadrangular hosted by Manhattan on Monday. Junction City was unsuccessful in winning a match against the tough competition. Competing for the Lady Jays were Krysta Talley and Erlinne Thornton in singles and the combinations of Anna Torres and Sierra Stage in one doubles, and Avery Jacobsen and Lucy Rivera Ramirez at two doubles.

The Lady Jays compete in the Salina South Invitational on Thursday beginning at 3 p.m.

Kansas receives notice of allegations from NCAA

LAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) — The University of Kansas received a notice of allegations from the NCAA on Monday that alleges significant violations within its storied men’s basketball program, a person familiar with the situation told The Associated Press.

The person spoke on condition of anonymity because neither the NCAA nor the school had announced the notice, which was first reported by Yahoo Sports. That initial report, citing unnamed sources, said the notice included three Level 1 violations tied primarily to recruiting, lack of institutional control and a responsibility charge leveled against Hall of Fame coach Bill Self.

Kansas spokesman Dan Beckler did not respond to multiple messages from The Associated Press seeking comment. The AP requested copies of all notices from the NCAA under the Kansas Open Records Act.

The NCAA’s Stacey Osburn also declined to comment on “current, pending or ongoing investigations.”

Kansas had been in the NCAA’s crosshairs since early this summer, when Vice President Stan Wilcox said at least six schools were likely to receive notices of allegations for Level 1 infractions

North Carolina State was the first of them, getting a notice July 10 of two violations, including a failure-to-monitor charge leveled against former coach Mark Gottfried.

Arizona, Auburn, Creighton, Louisville, LSU and USC have also been under the microscope.

Level 1 infractions are considered the most severe by the NCAA, and often include postseason bans, the forfeiture of wins and championships and the loss of scholarships. But the notice itself is only the beginning of a process that can often take more than a year — the school typically sends a response to the NCAA enforcement committee, setting off an exchange of information.

Ultimately, a hearing will be scheduled and Kansas will be allowed to present its case. The NCAA will then issue its ruling, often within several months, and the school retains the right to appeal.

Kansas was among the most prominent college basketball programs swept up in an NCAA probe into a pay-for-play scheme that began with an FBI investigation into apparel company Adidas.

The inquiry centered on a former employee, T.J. Gassnola, who testified in October that he had made payments to several recruits for schools tied to Adidas. Among them were a $90,000 payment to the family of then-Kansas recruit Billy Preston and $2,500 to the guardian of current forward Silvio De Sousa.

Gassnola, who avoided prison time by cooperating with the investigation, said he also paid $20,000 to Fenny Falmagne, De Sousa’s guardian, to pry the prospect loose from an agreement with Maryland.

Self said last October that “when recruiting potential student-athletes, my staff and I have not and do not offer improper inducements to them, or their families, to influence their college decisions, nor are we aware of any third-party involvement to do so.

“As the leader of the Kansas men’s basketball program,” Self added, “I take pride in my role to operate with integrity and within the NCAA rules.”

Gassnola testified that Self was unaware of the payments, but text messages and phone records indicate a close relationship with the national championship-winning coach. And an attorney for former Adidas executive James Gatto told a jury that his client approved the payment to Falmagne only after Self and his longtime assistant, Kurtis Townsend, requested Gassnola to provide it.

“The evidence, I submit, shows that Kansas’ head coach knew of and asked for a payment to be made to Silvio De Sousa’s handler,” the attorney, Michael Schachter, said at the time. “More than that, Coach Self requested just the kind of help that Mr. Gassnola arranged as a condition for Coach Self to permit Adidas to continue their sponsorship agreement with the University of Kansas.”

In April, the school signed a 14-year, $196 million extension of its apparel and sponsorship deal with Adidas. The deal, which is worth $14 million annually, runs through the 2030-31 school year.

Gatto, former Adidas consultant Merl Code and handler Chris Dawkins have been found guilty of felony charges of wire fraud and conspiracy to commit wire fraud in connection with the case. Gassnola was given probation as part of his cooperation agreement with federal prosecutors.

While Gassnola appeared to try to shield Self from the FBI probe, their relationship came out in text messages presented by defense attorneys at his trial. In one exchange, Gassnola texted Self that “I talked to Fenny,” and the coach replied, “We good?” Gassnola said, “Always. That’s light work.”

Later, Gassnola texted about keeping Self and Kansas happy with lottery picks. Self responded: “That’s how (it) works. At UNC and Duke.”

De Sousa was declared ineligible for two full seasons by the NCAA, and sat out last season before declaring for the draft. He withdrew when the NCAA approved his appeal to play this season.

The Jayhawks had their run of 14 consecutive Big 12 championships end this past season, when Kansas State and Texas Tech tied for the crown. But with several returning stars and another elite recruiting class, the Jayhawks were expected to be a top-five team in the AP preseason poll.

K-State’s Oct. 5 game vs. Baylor set for afternoon kick

MANHATTAN, Kan. – The Big 12 Conference and ABC/ESPN announced Monday that Kansas State’s Big 12 Conference home opener against Baylor on October 5 will kick off at 2:30 p.m., and be televised by either ABC, ESPN or ESPN2. The TV designation will be announced on Sunday.

It marks the second-straight time that the Wildcats’ home game against the Bears will be televised by the ESPN family of networks as the 2017 contest was on ESPN2. K-State is 2-1 in its last three matchups against Baylor, which includes a 33-20 home victory two years ago.

The 22nd-ranked Wildcats travel to Oklahoma State this Saturday for a 6 p.m., game inside Boone Pickens Stadium that will be shown on Big 12 Now on ESPN+.

The Baylor game opens a three-game homestand for K-State with only 2,500 seats remaining for the contest against the Bears. Public tickets start at just $35 and groups of 12 or more can get in for as low as $25.

Lady Jays finish third in the William Chrisman Volleyball Tournament

The Junction City Lady Jays defeated Harrisonville, Belton and Grandview, Missouri high school volleyball teams Saturday in a tournament hosted by William Chrisman High school in the Kansas City area.

Coach Basil Nevill said in pool play Junction City defeated Grandview 25-17, 25-12 and split with Raytown 21-25, 25-20 and with Kansas City Christian East 21-25, 25-23.

In bracket play Junction City defeated Harrisonville 25-10, 27-29, 26-24, lost to Nevada 18-25, 18-25 and defeated Belton 23-25, 25-21, 25-19

Junction City is 7-6 on the season. The Lady Jays play in Tonganoxie this Saturday.

K-State is ranked in national football polls

Kansas State is ranked in the weekly Amway Coaches poll and the Associated Press football poll this week.

The Wildcats, who play at Oklahoma State Saturday night, are ranked 24th in the AP poll and 22nd in the Amway Coaches poll.

Kansas State is 3-0 on the season.

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